For those having issues with the hand holding the gun, the joints are pretty much like what 1/60 Gundams have and you can rotate the thumb so it sits naturally and can hold the gun. I have no issues with mine and will post a closer pic of the hand once I get back home.
Regarding the color, yes, its subtle, but still good enough. I am very, very much happy with mine and hope it holds up for years.
Exaclty. Smooth plastic on smooth plastic just doesn’t grip well. There’s just no friction. That’s why I added some double sided tape, so it wouldn’t wobble when I moved the figure. It’s not that I don’t know how to use an articulated hand lol, it’s pretty self explanatory. I happen to have two attached to my body since birth.Moving the thumb does help, but it’s still not possible to get the fingers to naturally wrap around the pistol handle. And even though the plastic version stays in better a slight bump or when moving or losing his arm the thing will fall right out, the original was exactly like this too.
I like the articulated fingers, it just needed an additional fixed trigger finger hand
I know man. But I’m a stickler for detail, and you never ever hold a gun with your finger on the trigger unless you plan to fire it. So if his hand is at his hip, I keep his trigger finger out to look more believable. I know it’s neurotic, but there’s no shortage of that in 1/6 figure collecting, lol.Rory, I notice you have his finger outside the trigger guard. If you're having trouble convincing him to hold the gun, putting his finger in there helps. I found the finger jointson this one to be stiffer than my 2014 one (though that may just be age), and as a result I didn't have any trouble getting him to hold it--but I've also had plenty of practice with the 2014 version.
Yeah, I figured that's why you had it that way. If it makes a difference, I don't think RoboCop is ever seen to utilize proper trigger discipline, lol. Perhaps one's headcanon can be that it's not necessary because his mechanical precision makes an accidental discharge virtually impossible, haha.I know man. But I’m a stickler for detail, and you never ever hold a gun with your finger on the trigger unless you plan to fire it. So if his hand is at his hip, I keep his trigger finger out to look more believable. I know it’s neurotic, but there’s no shortage of that in 1/6 figure collecting, lol.
Probably because it's custom molds top to bottom, which is the most expensive part of the process. It's a lot less expensive to put a fat suit and tailored clothes on a body made of generic parts. While we've seen ThreeZero do something equally complex in their 1/9th Iron Man line, there's a lot more demand for Iron Man--significantly defraying the production costs.^ You bring up and interesting point. Why hasn't any 3rd party company taken a crack at any robocop figures? I mean there are other robocop figures to be sure. Neca, mcfarlane, medicom, but none in 1/6 scale except for HT.
I didn't know that. Is it possible to swap out the joints with a more durable type?You should be glad of the limited mobility as those clear joints holding the diecast limbs are already stressed at it is. I remember some posts of them breaking when posing. I have 3 of these and one of the head joints just decided to came off for no reason a couple of years ago, thankfully I was able to glue them back.
If someone 3D printed better ones to replace the translucent ones, sure. (EDIT: I forgot someone already did, vid below). Nowadays I don't pose my 3 Robos since there's a good chance those joints might fail. It's a critical engineering flaw with these Robo figures, ditto with the dome on those ED-209s.I didn't know that. Is it possible to swap out the joints with a more durable type?
If someone 3D printed better ones to replace the translucent ones, sure. (EDIT: I forgot someone already did, vid below). Nowadays I don't pose my 3 Robos since there's a good chance those joints might fail. It's a critical engineering flaw with these Robo figures, ditto with the dome on those ED-209s.
Looks amazing.Mine arrived and and somehow it's a little underwhelming. I do love the color and finish. But there's gaps all over, in his wrists, hips, shoulders, etc, that you can see right through. Not to mention, as others have stated, it's pretty static. That and I had to use double sided tape to get that articulated hand to reliably carry the pistol.
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Yeah, we need some of the bad guys from the first film. They are some of the most likeable bad guys in film history imo. **** Jones, Boddicker, Emil and Joe^ You bring up and interesting point. Why hasn't any 3rd party company taken a crack at any robocop figures? I mean there are other robocop figures to be sure. Neca, mcfarlane, medicom, but none in 1/6 scale except for HT.
If someone 3D printed better ones to replace the translucent ones, sure. (EDIT: I forgot someone already did, vid below). Nowadays I don't pose my 3 Robos since there's a good chance those joints might fail. It's a critical engineering flaw with these Robo figures, ditto with the dome on those ED-209s.
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